Dog Ear Infection: Signs, Causes & Treatment (2026)
If your dog keeps shaking its head, scratching at one ear, or the ear suddenly smells off, an ear infection is one of the most likely culprits — it's among the top reasons dogs land at the vet. Most cases are otitis externa, an infection of the outer ear canal. This guide walks through the early signs, what's really driving the infection underneath, when it needs a vet, what US treatment tends to cost, and how to stop it coming back.
A dog ear infection (usually otitis externa, of the outer ear canal) shows up as head shaking, ear scratching or rubbing, a foul or musty odor, yellow/brown/bloody discharge, and redness or pain. The yeast or bacteria you smell are usually a symptom, not the root cause — allergies, trapped moisture from swimming or baths, ear mites, a foreign object, or floppy-eared anatomy is often what lets them overgrow. See a vet soon rather than waiting, and go urgently for severe pain, a head tilt with loss of balance, heavy discharge, or bleeding. Don't push cotton swabs into the canal or pour in vinegar if the ear is painful or you don't know the eardrum is intact — that can damage the middle ear. Typical US treatment (exam, cytology, cleaning, and medication) runs about USD 100–500; chronic end-stage ears needing surgery cost far more. Confirm diagnosis and any ear medication with your veterinarian.
What an ear infection actually is
"Ear infection" almost always means otitis externa — inflammation and infection of the external ear canal, the L-shaped tube leading down to the eardrum. A dog's ear canal is deeper and more vertical than ours, which traps moisture and debris and makes it a comfortable spot for yeast and bacteria to overgrow. A few of these organisms live on healthy skin normally; trouble starts when something tips the balance and they multiply. Left alone, an outer-ear infection can work its way deeper into the middle and inner ear, which is harder to treat, so early attention matters.
Signs to watch for
Signs can come on fast or build up slowly, and one or both ears may be affected. Common ones include:
- Head shaking or tilting the head to one side
- Scratching or pawing at the ear, or rubbing the ear along furniture and the floor
- A foul or unusual odor — yeast tends to smell sweet or musty, bacteria more putrid
- Discharge in the ear: yellow, brown, or bloody
- Redness, swelling, or warmth of the ear flap and canal
- Pain when the ear is touched, or holding the ear down
A little brown wax now and then is normal. What's not normal is a smell you can notice from across the room, a canal that looks angry-red, or a dog that yelps when you touch the ear — those point to infection rather than routine dirt.
What causes it (the part owners miss)
Here's the thing most people don't realize: the yeast or bacteria are often the result, not the root cause. A vet's job is to find what let them overgrow, because if that's not addressed, the infection keeps coming back. The usual underlying drivers are allergies (environmental or food — allergy is involved in a large share of chronic ear cases, and ear infections show up in the majority of dogs with food allergies), trapped moisture after swimming or baths, ear mites, a foreign object like a grass seed lodged in the canal, or excess hair and wax. Ear shape matters too — breeds with long floppy ears or narrow canals, like Cocker Spaniels, Basset Hounds, Golden and Labrador Retrievers, and Shih Tzus, get less airflow and are more prone.
Common root causes
| Underlying driver | Why it leads to infection |
|---|---|
| Allergies (food or environmental) | Inflames the ear lining, driving repeat and chronic infections |
| Moisture (swimming, bathing) | Warm, damp canal lets yeast and bacteria multiply |
| Ear anatomy (floppy ears, narrow canals) | Poor airflow traps humidity and debris |
| Ear mites | Common cause in puppies; intense itch and dark debris |
| Foreign body (grass awn, seed) | Sudden pain, head shaking, usually one ear |
When to see a vet
Ear infections rarely clear up on their own, and the safest move is to book a vet visit soon after you notice the signs rather than waiting it out. Go promptly — and treat it as urgent — if your dog is in obvious pain, the ear is very swollen or bleeding, there's a strong discharge, you see a head tilt with loss of balance or unusual eye movements, or there are signs of hearing loss. Those can signal a deeper middle- or inner-ear problem. Repeated infections in the same ear also deserve a proper work-up to find the underlying cause, not just another round of drops.
Why home cleaning can backfire
It's tempting to grab cotton swabs or a bottle of vinegar and DIY it, but this is where owners often make things worse. Never push cotton swabs down into the canal — you can pack debris deeper or damage the eardrum. And don't pour in vinegar, hydrogen peroxide, or home solutions if the ear is very painful, swollen, bleeding, or if you don't know whether the eardrum is intact: an acidic or harsh liquid reaching a ruptured eardrum causes severe pain and can damage the middle ear. A vet examines the canal with an otoscope and checks the eardrum before choosing a cleaner or medication for exactly this reason. Save the home cleaning for gentle, vet-approved maintenance on a healthy ear.
What treatment looks like
A typical visit starts with an otoscope exam and ear cytology — swabbing the ear and looking at the sample under a microscope to see whether it's yeast, bacteria, or both, which determines the medication. The vet usually cleans the canal, then sends you home with a topical antibiotic and/or antifungal, sometimes with an anti-inflammatory for comfort. Most uncomplicated infections improve within a week or two, but a recheck to confirm the infection has fully cleared is important — stopping early is a common reason it bounces back. Bacterial and yeast cases often need repeated checkups over about 2–4 weeks; stubborn or chronic ears can take months, and a small number of dogs need lifelong management.
Typical US cost ranges
- Exam + ear cleaning + medication (straightforward otitis externa): USD 100–175
- With cytology and recheck factored in: USD 150–500 total
- Antibiotic or antifungal drops on their own: roughly USD 30–50
- Chronic, end-stage ears needing TECA surgery: a few thousand USD (often USD 3,000–4,000+)
Costs swing with your region, the clinic, and how advanced the infection is. Catching it early — while it's a simple outer-ear case — is far cheaper than letting it become chronic, which is where the big surgical numbers come in. Pet insurance may offset some of this, though many policies exclude pre-existing or recurring conditions, so it's worth checking the fine print.
Preventing repeat infections
Prevention is mostly about keeping the canal dry and staying on top of whatever drives the inflammation. Dry your dog's ears gently after swimming and baths, do a quick weekly look-and-sniff so you catch changes early, and use a vet-recommended ear cleaner only as directed — over-cleaning a healthy ear can irritate it just as much as neglect. If your dog gets infections again and again, the real fix is usually managing the underlying allergy with your vet rather than repeating drops. Floppy-eared and swimming dogs need a bit more vigilance.
Track ear health with PetCare AI
Log each ear flare-up, cleaning, and medication course in PetCare AI's care calendar so you can spot a pattern — many owners don't notice their dog gets an ear infection every allergy season until it's written down. Set reminders for recheck visits and finishing the full course of drops, the two lapses that let infections return. You can ask the AI vet assistant to help you sort "normal wax" from "see-a-vet" signs and use the in-app finder to locate a nearby clinic. For any painful, bleeding, or recurring ear, confirm the diagnosis and treatment with your veterinarian — the eardrum needs a real exam before anything goes in the canal.
Frequently asked questions
Will my dog's ear infection go away on its own?
Usually not. Ear infections rarely clear up without treatment, and waiting can let the infection move deeper into the middle or inner ear, which is harder and more expensive to treat. It's safest to see a vet soon after you notice head shaking, odor, or scratching rather than hoping it resolves.
Can I clean my dog's ears with vinegar or cotton swabs at home?
Be careful. Never push cotton swabs into the canal — you can pack debris deeper or damage the eardrum. And don't pour vinegar, peroxide, or home solutions into an ear that's painful, swollen, or bleeding, or when you don't know if the eardrum is intact, because acidic liquid reaching a ruptured eardrum can seriously damage the middle ear. Only do gentle, vet-approved cleaning on a healthy ear.
Why does my dog keep getting ear infections?
Recurring infections usually mean there's an underlying cause that hasn't been addressed — most often allergies (environmental or food), but also trapped moisture, ear anatomy, or mites. The yeast and bacteria are the result, not the root. Repeated drops treat the flare-up but not the cause, so a proper work-up with your vet to manage the underlying issue is what actually breaks the cycle.
How much does it cost to treat a dog ear infection in the US?
A straightforward outer-ear infection — exam, ear cleaning, and medication — typically runs about USD 100–175, or USD 150–500 once cytology and a recheck are included. Drops alone are roughly USD 30–50. Chronic, end-stage ears that need surgery (TECA) can cost a few thousand dollars, which is why catching it early matters.
How can I stop ear infections from coming back?
Keep the canal dry — gently dry the ears after swimming and baths — do a quick weekly look-and-sniff, and use a vet-recommended cleaner only as directed (over-cleaning irritates a healthy ear). If infections keep recurring, work with your vet to manage the underlying allergy rather than just repeating drops. Floppy-eared and swimming dogs need extra vigilance.
Related guides
Ask an online AI vet, 24/7
Free AI vet consultation, care calendar, and nearby vet clinic finder for dogs and cats.
Try PetCare AI free